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OVERVIEW

Throughout the work of Ukrainian-Russian biogeochemist Vladimir Vernadsky, we find a powerful argument for why processes on Earth, and in the Universe, are organized according to a top-down principle of life, and, even higher, human cognition. This is a concept found throughout the writings and speeches of economist Lyndon LaRouche, who has often referenced the work of Vernadsky.

The work of Lyndon LaRouche has focused more explicitly on the fundamental distinction between animal and human life: although the physical appearance of man and ape might have a striking resemblance, the actions able to be enacted by those two species are entirely different, and they represent a specific kind of difference. The difference is not a matter of choice, or of taste: animals are fundamentally incapable of creating the kinds of changes to themselves as well as their environment that human beings are capable of, and there are quantitative effects which illustrate this, central to Mr. LaRouche’s science of physical economy. For example, animal population growth, which may appear at first to be more rapid when examining a relatively short interval of time (as in the well-known case of rabbit population growth), will ultimately level out, as the animal populations are unable to make any fundamental changes to their environment to increase its potential habitability.

Vernadsky’s life’s work ended up culminating in a similar investigation, of the unique distinction of man from animal, something Vernadsky approached from the standpoint of a biogeochemist. Having immersed himself in the study of how life transformed the surface of the Earth, he marveled at the power of human creativity to do the same, but on a quantitatively and qualitatively higher level. In his paper “Some Words on the Noosphere,” Vernadsky asked:

“How can thought change material processes? Here a new riddle has arisen before us. Thought is not a form of energy. How then can it change material processes? That question has not as yet been solved… as for the coming of the noosphere, we see around us at every step the empirical results of that “incomprehensible” process. That mineralogical rarity, native iron, is now being produced by the billions of tons. Native aluminum, which never before existed on our planet, is now produced in any quantity. The same is true with regard to the countless numbers of artificial chemical combinations (biogenic “cultural” minerals) newly created on our planet.”

Vernadsky also expressed his confidence in the noösphere, despite the World War which he found himself in the middle of, saying:

“At present we cannot afford to realize that, in the great historical tragedy through which we live, we have elementally chosen the right path leading into the noosphere. I say elementally, as the whole history of mankind is proceeding in this direction.”

Today we find ourselves in a similar situation, faced with the threat of a great new war. The only solution to the crisis faced by mankind lies in the further development of the noösphere as Vernadsky saw it. May the thoughts of Vernadsky find their rightful place in science, and politics, today.

TRANSLATIONS & WORKS

Selected Works by Vernadsky on the Noösphere

“These are sciences dealing with the ‘spiritual’ creativity of the human individual in his social environment, the sciences of the brain and of the sense organs, of the problems of psychology or logic. These condition the quest of the fundamental laws of Man’s scientific cognition, that is, those powers which have transformed the biosphere encompassed by Man into a natural body, new in its geological and biological processes, into a new state, the noösphere, consideration of which I will turn to below.”

— V.I. VernadskyScientific Thought As a Planetary Phenomenon, 1938

“There exists now on the terrestrial surface a great geological force. ...This force does not seem to be a new manifestation or special form of energy, nor yet a pure and simple expression of known energy. But it exerts a profound and powerful influence on the course of energetic phenomena on the Earth’s surface, and consequently has repercussions, smaller but undeniable, beyond the surface, on the existence of the planet itself. ...This force is human reason, the directed and controlled will of social man.”

— V.I. VernadskyHuman Autotrophy, 1925

“The noösphere is a new geological phenomenon on our planet. In it, for the first time, man becomes a large-scale geological force. He can, and must, rebuild the province of his life by his work and thought, rebuild it radically in comparison with the past. Wider and wider creative possibilities open before him. It may be that he generation of our grandchildren will approach their blossoming. ...Here a new riddle has arisen before us. Thought is not a form of energy. How then can it change material processes? That question has not as yet been solved.”

— V.I. VernadskyThe Noösphere, 1943

Selected Works by Vernadsky on the Biosphere

“The study of the biogenic migration of the atoms on the living substance is the fundamental task of biogeochemistry. In spite of the fact that the mass of all living organisms is negligible when compared to the biosphere, since it is of the order of some tenth fractions of a percent—as a mater of fact, the living substance determines the whole chemical structure of the biosphere.”

— V.I. VernadskyOn Some Fundamental Problems of Biogeochemistry, 1938

“In this geological process—which is fundamentally biogeochemical—a single individual unit of living matter, out of the totality of humanity—a great personality, whether a scientist, an inventor, or a statesman—can be of fundamental, decisive, directing importance, and can manifest himself as a geological force. This sort of manifestation of individuality in processes of enormous biogeochemical importance, is a new planetary phenomenon.”

— V.I. VernadskyProblems of Biogeochemistry II, 1938

“Yet, as soon as we approach living natural bodies, we encounter a fundamental change in the geometric phenomena, which, it seems to me, does not fit into the confines of Euclidean geometry of any number of dimensions. Basic here is the marked violation of, first, symmetry, and secondly, the manifestations of right-handedness and left-handedness”

— V.I. VernadskyOn the States of Physical Space, 1938

Available on Amazon

21st Century Science & Technology celebrates 150 years of Vernadsky with this two-volume anthology of original translations of Vernadsky, the founder of biogeochemistry, including articles both historical and scientific, regarding this prolific thinker.

Now available—This is the first English translation of this revolutionary essay by Vladimir I. Vernadsky. It was first published in 1930 in French in the Revue générale des sciences pures et appliquées. In it, Vernadsky makes a powerful and provocative argument for the need to develop what he calls “a new physics,” something he felt was clearly necessitated by the implications of the groundbreaking work of Louis Pasteur among few others, but also something that was required to free science from the long-lasting effects of the work of Isaac Newton, most notably.

For hundreds of years, science had developed in a direction which became increasingly detached from the breakthroughs made in the study of life and the natural sciences, detached even from human life itself, and committed reductionists and small-minded scientists were resolved to the fact that ultimately all would be reduced to “the old physics.” The scientific revolution of Einstein was a step in the right direction, but here Vernadsky insists that there is more progress to be made. He makes a bold call for a new physics, taking into account, and fundamentally based upon, the striking anomalies of life and human life.

Works by LaRouche on Vernadsky

“As Vernadsky defines the guidelines for a biogeochemical investigation of the boundaries separating the biosphere categorically from the abiotic domain, I had, as I explain below, developed my own, somewhat parallel approach to this view, that in work in which I, working from my standpoint as an admirer of Leibniz, subsumed the principle distinctions separating the principle of human scientific creativity from both animal and abiotic modes of behavior.”

— Lyndon LaRoucheVernadsky and Dirichlet’s Principle, 2005

Lyndon LaRouche’s economic science, including the Eurasian Land-Bridge project, was the focus of a scientific conference held Nov. 27-28 at Moscow’s Vernadsky State Geological Museum. The conference, attended by 50 top scientists from the Russian Academy of Sciences and Dr. Sergei Glazyev, head of the Economic Commission of the Russian Duma (Parliament), was sponsored by the Museum, and by the Schiller Institute, an organization founded by Helga Zepp LaRouche which promotes republican economics and Classical cultural policy. The subject of the conference was “The Realization of the Concept of the Noösphere in the 21st Century: Russia’s Mission in the World Today.”

Russian Scientists Discuss Ideas of LaRouche and Vernadsky, 2001

“The most awesome notion to be found among known cultures, is that associated with the best use of the word “spirit.” In those cases that that word is spoken as a matter of the science of Kepler, Leibniz, Riemann, or by me, it signifies a unique quality of existence. It refers to a specific quality of existence which affects, and is affected by abiotic and living existences, but which is neither derived from, nor contained within either or both of those domains.”

— Lyndon LaRoucheThe Spirit of Russian Science, 2001

VIDEO CLASSROOM

The most advanced and in-depth discussion of Vernadsky's core scientific concepts as they apply to man and economy, featuring Lyndon LaRouche and the LPAC Basement Team.

A collection of vignettes exploring the Vernadskian world around you.

FURTHER READING

By Jason Ross Vladimir Vernadsky’s concept of the different phase spaces of abiotic processes, life, and cognition, serve to illustrate the errors of trying to build up the entire universe from abiotic processes, through the implicit rejection of the possible existence of uniquely biological or noetic principles. In his 1930 “The Study of Life and the New Physics,” Vernadsky directly addresses the hereditary errors in the Cosmos of Newton: that the concepts of space, time, energy, and matter are final, that they can be determined from purely abiotic experiments, and that there is a fundamental distinction between the studied universe and the minds that study it.

By Benjamin Deniston With the rise of a new strategic alliance on the planet centered around the BRICS nations, comes the potential for a scientifically valid conception of the creative nature of mankind to govern the planet, and beyond.

By William JonesOn the occasion of the 150th anniversary of his birth, it is fitting that we set the record straight and expose the fraud which has been imposed on an unknowing public by the Greenie acolytes of Russell and his cohorts.

By Meghan RouillardLife constitutes an integral part of the mechanism of the biosphere. It is that which clearly stands out in the study of the geochemical history of the chemical elements: biogeochemical processes, so important, always require the intervention of life.

By Benjamin DenistonHere Vernadsky directly addresses the evolution of life on Earth from the standpoint of his concepts of the distinct, but interacting phase-spaces of the biosphere, lithosphere, and noösphere, concluding that evolution has a direction, and a specific, irreversible form of progress...

By William JonesFather of the Periodic Table of Elements, Dmitiri Mendeleyev was an avid explorer. Here is what we believe to be its first English translation of a letter to Finance Minister Count Sergei Witte, and was first published in The Soviet Arctic, 1937, No. 6. November 14, 1901.